There has been a dramatic fall in the number of people dying prematurely from lung cancer.

Scientists from Cancer Research UK say the drop has been due to successful anti-smoking campaigns.

The charity also hailed a dramatic fall in the number of deaths from breast cancer.

We've been enormously successful at persuading people to quit

Professor Richard Doll

The decreases are among the sharpest in the world. However, this is largely because historically the UK has had a high number of cancer deaths.

In the 1960s, almost 250 men in every 100,000 per year died before the age of 70 from smoking-related diseases.

The figure now is just over 100 men per 100,000 per year.

Sharp fall

Smoking-related cancers prematurely killed between 55 and 60 women per 100,000
in 1990, but the figure has now dropped to fewer than 50.

Although lung cancer accounts for most smoking related cancer deaths, smoking
is also linked to cancers of the gullet, bladder and pancreas.

Just 10 years ago, the UK had the highest number of deaths for breast cancer in the world.

But deaths from breast cancer among the under 70s have dropped by 30% in the last decade.

Sir Richard Peto, of Cancer Research UK, told the BBC: "We have got the best decrease in the world in lung cancer deaths, we have got the best decrease in the world in breast cancer deaths - lung cancers because lots of people have stopped smoking; breast cancer because the treatment has improved.

"These are the most important cancers there are in countries like Britain."

Professor Richard Doll, who first discovered the link between smoking and lung cancer, said: "We've been enormously successful at persuading people to quit.

"As a result, the death rate from lung cancer is tumbling more quickly than anywhere else in the world."

A Cancer Research UK spokesman said: "We're not claiming there aren't
problems with survival from some cancers, or that everything's rosy, but these are two really dramatic pieces of good news that people haven't really been aware of."

He said people giving up smoking, rather than not taking it up, had made the biggest impact on lung cancer deaths.

"What we've been really good at in this country is persuading people to quit," he said.